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4 - East Asia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Edmond Tang
Affiliation:
Lecturer and Head of the Centre for East Asian Christianity, University of Birmingham
John Parratt
Affiliation:
University of Birmingham
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Summary

For anyone attempting to give an account of the development of theology in East Asia a problem immediately arises: when and where to begin? Should it begin with the arrival of Christianity in China, Japan and Korea, or only with the emergence of alternative theologies which have made a radical break with the West and are truly responding to Asia's ancient cultural traditions as well as contemporary political contexts? It is evident from any survey of local theologies that they would often go through a period of imitation and adaptation before embarking on a creative phase. Many factors enter into the picture, one of which is the sense of gratitude and respect for tradition – the Western tradition in this case which brought Christianity to Asia – and the feeling of belonging to a historical church that often leads one to emphasise more the value of continuity and authority than that of critique and invention. It is interesting to note that up until the 1970s, before contextual theology became the order of the day, the dream of many East Asian theologians was to become an Asian Aquinas or Luther, and even today many would still be content to be followers and interpreters of Rahner, Barth or Moltmann. This conservatism is sometimes reinforced by church institutions; witness the not uncommon disciplinary actions that were taken against wayward theologians when they dared to move beyond the narrow confines of evangelical or Catholic theologies.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2004

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References

England, John C. (ed.) 1981. Living Theology in Asia. London
England, John C. et al. (ed.) 2002. Asian Christian Theologies – a Research Guide to Authors, Movements, Sources, vol. 1 (vols. 2 and 3 forthcoming). Delhi
Sugirtharajah, R. S. (ed.) 1993. Asian Faces of Jesus. London
Torres, Sergio and Virginia Fabella (eds.) 1978. The Emergent Gospel. New York
Chao, T. C. 1938. The Authority of Faith. Madras
Covell, Ralph R. 1986. Confucius, The Buddha, and Christ. New York
Ng, Lee-ming. 1971. ‘An Evaluation of T. C. Chao's Thought’ in Cheng Feng. Vol. XIV, nos. 1–2
Ng, Lee-ming 1979. ‘Christianity in China’ in Christianity in Asia. Vol. 1, ed. T. E. Thomas. Hong Kong
Thomas, T. K. (ed.) 1979. Christianity in Asia – North-East Asia, Hong Kong: Christian Conference of Asia
Ting, K. H. 1989. No Longer Strangers: Selected Writings of K. H. Ting, Raymond L. Whitehead (ed.). New York
Ting, K. H. 2000. Love Never Ends: Papers by K. H. Ting (English edition, Janice Wickeri (ed.)). Nanjing
Whyte, R. 1988. Unfinished Encounter: China and Christianity. London
Wickeri, Philip. 1989. Seeking the Common Ground. New York
Furuya, Yasuo (ed.) 1997. A History of Japanese Theology. Grand Rapids
Germany, Charles H. 1965. Protestant Theologies in Modern Japan. Tokyo Press
Kitamori, Kazoh. 1946. ET 1953. Theology of the Pain of God. Richmond
Koyama, Kosuke. 1974. Waterbuffalo Theology. New York
Koyama, Kosuke 1985. Mount Fuji and Mount Sinai. New York
Michalson, Carl. 1960. Japanese Contributions to Christian Theology. Philadelphia
Miura, Hiroshi. 1996. The Life and Thought of Kanzo Uchimura. Grand Rapids
Parratt, John. 2000. ‘Kazoh Kitarmori's Theology of the Pain of God Revisited’ in Mit dem Fremden Leben (Festschrift fuer Theo Sundermeier) D. Becker (ed.) 151–8
Philips, James M. 1981. From the Rising of the Sun – Christians and Society in Contemporary Japan. New York
Suggate, Alan. 1996. Japanese Christians and Society. Frankfurt
Suggate, Alan 2000. ‘Theology from below as a challenge to the West: Kuribayashi's Theology of the Crown of Thorns’ in W. Ustorf and Toshiko Murayama (eds.) Identity and Marginality: Rethinking Christianity in Northeast Asia, pp. 229–242. Frankfurt
Sundermeier, Theo (ed.) 1988. Brennpunkte in Kirche und Theologie Japans. Neukirchen
Takazawa, Katsumi. 1987. Das Heil im Heute. Goettingen
Chung, Hyun-Kung. 1990. Struggle to be the Sun Again. London
CTC–CCA (ed.) Minjung Theology: People as the Subject of History. New York
Kim, Young-bock. 1992. Messiah and Minjung: Christ's Solidarity with the People for a New Life. Hong Kong
Lee, Oo Chung. 1985. ‘One Woman's Confession of Faith’, International Review of Mission, April 1985Google Scholar
Lee, Jung-young. 1984. An Emerging Theology in World Perspective: Commentary on Korean Minjung Theology. Connecticut
Suh, David Kwang-Sun. 1983. Theology, Ideology and Culture. Hong Kong
Suh, David Kwang-Sun 1991. The Korean Minjung in Christ. Hong Kong
Suh, Nam-dong. 1975. ‘Jesus, Church history, and the Korean Church’ in The Search of Minjung TheologyGoogle Scholar
England, John C. (ed.) 1981. Living Theology in Asia. London
England, John C. et al. (ed.) 2002. Asian Christian Theologies – a Research Guide to Authors, Movements, Sources, vol. 1 (vols. 2 and 3 forthcoming). Delhi
Sugirtharajah, R. S. (ed.) 1993. Asian Faces of Jesus. London
Torres, Sergio and Virginia Fabella (eds.) 1978. The Emergent Gospel. New York
Chao, T. C. 1938. The Authority of Faith. Madras
Covell, Ralph R. 1986. Confucius, The Buddha, and Christ. New York
Ng, Lee-ming. 1971. ‘An Evaluation of T. C. Chao's Thought’ in Cheng Feng. Vol. XIV, nos. 1–2
Ng, Lee-ming 1979. ‘Christianity in China’ in Christianity in Asia. Vol. 1, ed. T. E. Thomas. Hong Kong
Thomas, T. K. (ed.) 1979. Christianity in Asia – North-East Asia, Hong Kong: Christian Conference of Asia
Ting, K. H. 1989. No Longer Strangers: Selected Writings of K. H. Ting, Raymond L. Whitehead (ed.). New York
Ting, K. H. 2000. Love Never Ends: Papers by K. H. Ting (English edition, Janice Wickeri (ed.)). Nanjing
Whyte, R. 1988. Unfinished Encounter: China and Christianity. London
Wickeri, Philip. 1989. Seeking the Common Ground. New York
Furuya, Yasuo (ed.) 1997. A History of Japanese Theology. Grand Rapids
Germany, Charles H. 1965. Protestant Theologies in Modern Japan. Tokyo Press
Kitamori, Kazoh. 1946. ET 1953. Theology of the Pain of God. Richmond
Koyama, Kosuke. 1974. Waterbuffalo Theology. New York
Koyama, Kosuke 1985. Mount Fuji and Mount Sinai. New York
Michalson, Carl. 1960. Japanese Contributions to Christian Theology. Philadelphia
Miura, Hiroshi. 1996. The Life and Thought of Kanzo Uchimura. Grand Rapids
Parratt, John. 2000. ‘Kazoh Kitarmori's Theology of the Pain of God Revisited’ in Mit dem Fremden Leben (Festschrift fuer Theo Sundermeier) D. Becker (ed.) 151–8
Philips, James M. 1981. From the Rising of the Sun – Christians and Society in Contemporary Japan. New York
Suggate, Alan. 1996. Japanese Christians and Society. Frankfurt
Suggate, Alan 2000. ‘Theology from below as a challenge to the West: Kuribayashi's Theology of the Crown of Thorns’ in W. Ustorf and Toshiko Murayama (eds.) Identity and Marginality: Rethinking Christianity in Northeast Asia, pp. 229–242. Frankfurt
Sundermeier, Theo (ed.) 1988. Brennpunkte in Kirche und Theologie Japans. Neukirchen
Takazawa, Katsumi. 1987. Das Heil im Heute. Goettingen
Chung, Hyun-Kung. 1990. Struggle to be the Sun Again. London
CTC–CCA (ed.) Minjung Theology: People as the Subject of History. New York
Kim, Young-bock. 1992. Messiah and Minjung: Christ's Solidarity with the People for a New Life. Hong Kong
Lee, Oo Chung. 1985. ‘One Woman's Confession of Faith’, International Review of Mission, April 1985Google Scholar
Lee, Jung-young. 1984. An Emerging Theology in World Perspective: Commentary on Korean Minjung Theology. Connecticut
Suh, David Kwang-Sun. 1983. Theology, Ideology and Culture. Hong Kong
Suh, David Kwang-Sun 1991. The Korean Minjung in Christ. Hong Kong
Suh, Nam-dong. 1975. ‘Jesus, Church history, and the Korean Church’ in The Search of Minjung TheologyGoogle Scholar

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  • East Asia
    • By Edmond Tang, Lecturer and Head of the Centre for East Asian Christianity, University of Birmingham
  • Edited by John Parratt, University of Birmingham
  • Book: An Introduction to Third World Theologies
  • Online publication: 05 June 2012
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511801587.004
Available formats
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Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • East Asia
    • By Edmond Tang, Lecturer and Head of the Centre for East Asian Christianity, University of Birmingham
  • Edited by John Parratt, University of Birmingham
  • Book: An Introduction to Third World Theologies
  • Online publication: 05 June 2012
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511801587.004
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • East Asia
    • By Edmond Tang, Lecturer and Head of the Centre for East Asian Christianity, University of Birmingham
  • Edited by John Parratt, University of Birmingham
  • Book: An Introduction to Third World Theologies
  • Online publication: 05 June 2012
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511801587.004
Available formats
×